Sanitas Radio | Because your health and longevity should not be classified information.

Thursday, July 3, 2014

BPA makes breast cancer tumors resistant to chemotherapy Learn more

The sudden diagnosis of cancer, the realization of its presence within,
sends a cold paralysis through the mind, down the spine. The presence of
cancer does not always mean that the end is imminent; instead, it can
serve as an important message to the entire person, signaling for a new
course in life.

The diagnosis of new-found cancer cells can
immediately burden one's emotions with grief and stress. At this
emotional juncture, it's important to turn the pressure around and begin
thanking the cancer for serving as a warning message. Cancer can be a
message to a person that the body is under stress, that the cellular
environment within is in a state of acidosis and has become an ideal
place for fungus to thrive. The cancer is a warning bell tolling on the
inside, messaging that the cells are not being properly cared for, that
the immune system is weak, that nutrients aren't being properly utilized
and that the cells are swelling and not producing adequate energy.

To
a typical allopathic oncologist, cancer is not the body communicating
its deprived state. Many doctors will put a death sentence in a
patient's mind, numbering their days. To them, cancer is a sudden and
overwhelming attack. They think that it's inescapable, and that it must
be immediately cut out, radiated or doused in chemotherapy cocktails --
procedures that show little to no mercy for a patient. These approaches
are oftentimes desperate and do not look at underlying causes and
co-factors that have compromised the body's normal function and energy
production of cells.